Environmental and economic perspectives of concrete with high mineral addition content: a case study
Keywords:
concreto com adições minerais, altos teores, custo, energia, emissão Co2, efeito estufaAbstract
Concrete, the most consumed building material in the world, requires a large amount of natural resources, and its production has a strong impact on the increase of the greenhouse effect. Fly ash and ground granulated blast-furnace slag are highly available industrial by-products, which can replace cement in high contents with significant advantages. This paper presents a case study in which the replacement of cement in 90% by those two mineral additions has reduced costs in 5% in costs, energy consumption in 58%, and CO2 emission in 81%, and increased the durability mean index in 34%. The use of 90% mineral additions in 5.4% (351 Mm³) of the world’s concrete production, from 2005, could save 78Mt of cement, resulting in the maintenance of world cement production at the level of 1.78 Mt/year, without future increases. There would be an annual reduction of 130 Mt on the extraction of raw materials, an economy of 0.4 EJ in energy - the same consumed by Denmark - and a 8.7% reduction of production costs of concrete with 90% of fly ash and blast-furnace slag, compared to conventional Portland cement concrete.Downloads
Downloads
Published
How to Cite
Issue
Section
License
Authors who publish in Ambiente Construído agree to the terms:
- The authors grant the Journal the right to publish under the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY 4.0), allowing access, printing, reading, distribution, adaptation, and development of other research, if the authorship is recognized.
- Authors are authorized to distribute the work published in the Journal, such as institutional repositories, or to include their article as part of the thesis and/or dissertation, as long as they mention the publication reference in Ambiente Construído.
- Anyone can read, distribute, print, download, and indicate the address of the complete article without prior authorization from the Journal respecting the CC BY 4.0 license.
Creative Commons Attribution License
ISSN 1678-8621